Letters
containing
a sketch of the Politics of France from the thirty-first of
May 1793 till the twenty-eighth of July, 1794.
May 1793 till the twenty-eighth of July, 1794.
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v11
Fitzgerald, P. Life of Sterne. 2 vols. 1864. 2nd edn. 1896.
Sterne's Works. Ed. Saintsbury, G. 6 vols. 1894.
Young, G. A history of Whitby. 2 vols. 1817.
William Tasker (1740-1800)
Ode to the Warlike Genius of Great Britain. 1778. 3rd edn, with other
poems. 1779.
Ode to Curiosity. 2nd edn. 1779.
William Thompson
Poetical Works. To which is prefixed the life of the author. A complete edn
of the Poets of Great Britain. Vol. x. 1793, etc.
Poems on several occasions, to which is added Gondibert and Birtha, a tragedy.
Oxford, 1757.
A Hymn to May. [1740 ? ]
Sickness, a poem. Two Books. 1745.
Gondibert and Birtha, a tragedy. [1751. ]
The Happy Life. The Magi, a sacred eclogue. The Cabinet of Poetry.
Vol. v.
Ed. Pratt, S. J. 1808.
John Tweddell (1769-1799)
Prolusiones Juveniles. 1792.
Paston (G. ). The Romance of John Tweddell. Little Memoirs of the 18th
century. 1901.
Thomas Sedgwick Whalley (1746-1828)
Edwy and Edilda. 1779.
The Castle of Montval. A tragedy in five acts. 1781.
The Fatal Kiss. 1781.
Mont Blanc. 1788.
Journals and Correspondence. 1863.
Sir Charles Hanbury Williams
The works. . . of Sir C. H. W. . . . from the originals in the possession of his
Grandson, the. . . Earl of Essex. With notes by H. Walpole, Earl of
Orford. 3 vols. 1822.
An Ode to the Honourable H. . . y F. . x, on the marriage of the Du. . . s of
M. . . r [Duchess of Manchester] to H . . . 8. . . y [Hussey] Esq. 1746.
An Ode to. . . S. Poyntz, Esq. 1746.
I . . . ss. . . y [i. e. Hussey, afterwards Montagu, earl of Beaulieu] to Sir
C. . . . H. . . . W. . . s: or the Rural Reflections of a Welch poet. 1746.
## p. 430 (#452) ############################################
430
[ch.
Bibliography
A collection of poems principally consisting of the most celebrated pieces of
Sir C. H. W. 1763.
The Odes of Sir C. H. Williams. 1775.
Correspondance de Cathérine II et de Sir C. Hanbury Williams, 1756-7.
(Russian and French. ) Moscow, 1909.
Coxe, W. Historical Tour in Monmouthshire. 1801.
Hutchinson, John. Herefordshire Biographies. 1890.
Helen Maria Williams
Poems. 2 vols. 1786. 2nd edn. 1791.
Poems . . . and original sonnets by H. M. Williams. 1803.
Recueil de Poésies, extraites des ouvrages d' H. M. W. ; traduit de l'Anglais
par M. S. de Boufflers, et par M. Esmónard. Paris, 1808.
Poems on various subjects. With introductory remarks on the present state
of science and literature in France. 1823.
Edwin and Eltruda, a legendary tale. 1782.
An Ode on the Peace. 1783.
Peru, a poem. 1784.
Ode to Peace. [1786. ]
Julia, a novel; interspersed with . . . poetical pieces. 2 vols. 1790.
Letters written in France in the summer of 1790, to a Friend in England.
1790. French edn. Paris, 1791.
A Farewell for two years to England. A poem. 1791.
Letters on the French Revolution, written in France, in the summer of 1790,
to a friend in England; containing various anecdotes . . . and Memoirs of
Mons. and Madame Du F. . . . Boston, 1791.
Letters containing a sketch of the Politics of France from the thirty-first of
May 1793 till the twenty-eighth of July, 1794. 2 vols. 1795. French
edn. Paris (1795? ].
Paul and Virginia. [Translated by H. M. W. ] 1795.
A tour in Switzerland; or a view of the present state of . . . those Cantons, with
comparative sketches of the present state of Paris. 2 vols. 1798.
The History of Perourou; or the Bellows-Mender. [Translated from the
French by H. M. W. ) Dublin, 1801.
The political and confidential correspondence of Lewis the Sixteenth. Fr.
and Eng. With observations on each letter. 1803.
A refutation of the libel on the memory of the late King of France. 1804.
Verses addressed by H. M. W. to her two nephews, on Saint Helen's day.
Paris, 1809.
Personal narrative of Travels to the Equinoctial Regions of the New Conti-
nent. . . translated into English by H. M. W. 1814.
Researches concerning the Institutions and Monuments of the Ancient In-
habitants of America. . . translated into English by H. M. W. 1814.
On the late persecution of the Protestants in the South of France. 1816.
The Leper of the City of Aoste. Translated from the French by H. M. W.
1817.
The Charter. Lines addressed by H. M. W. to her Nephew, A. C. L.
Coquerel, on his wedding-day. Paris, 1819.
Letters on the events which have passed in France, since the Restoration in
1815. 1819.
Alger, J. E. Englishmen in the French Revolution. 1889.
Coquerel, J. G. Introduction to Souvenirs de la Révolution. 1827.
## p. 431 (#453) ############################################
VIII]
Lesser Poets
431
William Woty
Campanologia: a Poem in praise of ringing. 1761.
Muses' Advice addressed to the Poets of the Age. 1761.
The Blossoms of Helicon. 1763.
The Poetical Calendar. . . . Written and selected by F. Fawkes and W. Woty.
1763.
Church Langton: a poem. Leicester (1767 ? ].
Poetical Works. 2 vols. 1770.
The Female Advocate, a poem. 1770. 1771.
The Stage; a poetical epistle to a friend. Derby (1770? ].
The Estate Orator: a Town Eclogue. 1774.
Particular Providence; a poetical essay. 1774.
Poems on Several Occasions. Derby, 1780.
Fugitive and Original Poems. Derby, 1786.
Poetical Amusements. Nottingham, 1789.
G. A. B. AND A. T. B.
CHAPTER IX
BLAKE
A full bibliography of Blake's works is in preparation by Mr Geoffrey
Keynes.
I. MANUSCRIPTS AND ORIGINAL ISSUES
A. MSS.
Seven-page MS, without title or date, containing two prose fragments, the
first and longer ptd by W. M. Rossetti as irregular verse in The
Monthly Review (August 1903), under the title of The Passions. The
remaining fragment has never been ptd as a whole.
[An Island in the Moon). MS without title or date: circa 1784. Ptd by
Ellis, E. J. , The Real Blake, pp. 67-82.
Tiriel, MS by Mr Blake. n. d. ; circa 1788.
The Four Zoas. The Torments of Love and Jealousy in the Death and
Judgment of Albion, the Ancient Man, by William Blake, 1797. This
is the revised form, made circa 1800. In the earlier version (1797), the
title-page read: Vala or The Death and Judgment of the Ancient Man.
A Dream of Nine Nights by William Blake 1797.
Rossetti MS, also known as the MS Book, or, less correctly, as Ideas of Good
and Evil. Originally a sketch-book, it was used, from time to time during
a period of some eighteen years, for the transcription or drafting of
verse and prose. The principal literary contents, in chronological order,
are (1) certain of the Songs of Experience and lyrics of the same period
(1793-4); (2) longer and more definitely symbolic poems, and epigrams
on art and artists (1800-3); (3) prose entries: Advertisement to
Blake's Canterbury Pilgrims from Chaucer, containing anecdotes of
Artists, printed as Public Address by D. G. Rossetti. For the year 1810:
Additions to Blake's Catalogue of Pictures etc. , which Rossetti has
renamed A Vision of the Last Judgment; (4) The Everlasting Gospel
(circa 1810).
A full bibliographical description of the Rossetti MS is given in
Blake's Poetical Works, ed. John Sampson, Oxford, 1905.
## p. 432 (#454) ############################################
432
[CH.
Bibliography
Pickering MS, containing fair transcripts of ten poems, written circa 1800-4.
See Sampson, op. cit.
Important matter is found in Blake's marginalia to the following works:
Swedenborg. The Wisdom of Angels concerning Divine Love and Wisdom.
Edn of 1788. Ptd Ellis, E. J. , The Real Blake, pp. 109-115.
Lavater's Aphorisms. Edn of 1788. Ellis, pp. 123-151.
Reynold's Discourses. 3 vols. 1798. Ellis, pp. 371-396.
Bacon's Essays. 1798. Gilchrist, vol. I, pp. 267-9.
Wordsworth's Poems. Edn of 1815. Ellis, pp. 415-419.
Dr Thornton's pamphlet on the Lord's Prayer. 1827. Ellis, pp. 365-7.
B. Works printed by Blake's method of relief-etching,
unless otherwise stated
There is No Natural Religion.
No perfect copy of this work is known. W. Muir in his facsimile
has rearranged the plates of the copy in the Print Room of the British
Museum, and an imperfect set formerly in his own possession, combining
them into a tractate in two parts. Sampson (Blake's Poetical Works.
Oxford edition, 1913) follows the same arrangement in the main.
All Religions are One.
A series of plates in the possession of the Linnell family, with the
title-plate supplied from the set formerly owned by W. M. Muir: see
Sampson, op. cit.
, pp. xxvi-xxviii.
Songs of Innocence. 1789. The Author and Printer W. Blake.